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The Accidental Blogger - Introduction

Jul 15, 2008
Posted by: Cara Barnes


I partner with a splinter group of individuals who come together for short bursts of time on a bus ride of destiny.  This mélange of souls carry with them some sort of common agenda, which I assume in my early morning haze is the going to or coming from a point of destiny that somehow fits into the overall rhythm of life.

It has been my collective experience that we are connected regardless of what we “do” on a daily basis and by “do”, I mean our occupations.  For instance, I know that Sarah with whom I ride works in the billing department of a large company which oversees the management of condominium complex in which I live.  But I was not aware of this connection until we struck up a conversation one day.  We are not friends, we are not business associates, and at some point in our lives our paths will no longer cross.  But I’m a better person for the experience of meeting Sarah.  Talking to Sarah gets me out of myself and into a different place in my head and in my heart, kind of like “The Grinch Who Stole Christmas” – my heart gets bigger and my mind expands to a renewed place of possibility.

From this place of renewal comes freethinking and words begin to flow like a river, which is a good thing because it’s currently how I make part of my living.  I call myself “The Accidental Blogger” and my blogs will appear on this site as “The Zen of Debt Settlement USA”; an alternative approach to finding Your Inner Self through personal stories of redemption and other unconventional avenues of little victories related to living debt free.  Believe it or not, they are all connected and I look forward to sharing my experiences with you all.

 

Welcome to Economy 101

Jul 01, 2008
Posted by: Cara Barnes

Gas Prices and the Mortgage Crisis

As summer school is a shortened, intensive term, we are combining the topics of Gas Prices and the Mortgage Crisis into one last class.

These issues are great fodder in this, an election year, because more Americans are faced with the very real dilemma of how to get to work and/or are losing their homes.

In the movie, “My Fellow Americans”, Jack Lemmon and Jim Garner play two former chief executives who are thrown together and on the road.  When a scandal brewing in the White house threatens to implicate them both, Lemmon and Garner head out of town and into “real” America where they learn a lot about the country that elected them.  In a poignant scene, the executives share food with a family who appear to be on vacation, having a simple picnic along the roadside.  The family is honored to be sharing a meal with the duo and volunteer to take them in their over-packed and crowded station wagon to the nearest town.

Conversations ensue and one of the executives starts complaining about Americans who aren’t doing their part to shore up the economy.  The mother of the family asks her husband to pull the car over and asks the former executives to get out of the car immediately.  Offended and perplexed, the Lemmon character asks why and learns that they have not just been riding in the family’s car, they have been guests in their home.

How are you getting to work these days?  Are you carpooling or taking mass transportation?  Have you traded in the gas-guzzling SUV for a smaller and more gas-efficient automobile or hybrid?  Have you been able to keep up with your mortgage or are you one of the many who are anxiously awaiting the sale of your home to downsize into some more affordable?

These are humbling and life-altering times and much can be learned from those who’ve gone before us during like economies.

School’s out for summer!